
In addition, ESPN also provides an almost sickening array of television channels. A brief list of their channels include: ESPN, ESPN International, ESPN 2, ESPN News, ESPN Classic, ESPN Deportes, ESPNU, ESPN Plus, and ESPN Star Sports. Note that this is an abbreviated list. There are several other ways in which ESPN has figured out for you to consume their sports media.
They have their own magazine, their own award show, their own cell phone, their own line of books, and even a restaurant chain devoted to ESPN.

The reason for sharing the scope of ESPN with you before I get into the Streak For The Cash is to evidence the empire that ESPN has created. Sports can occur at any time and at any place, but ESPN has worked so hard to differentiate their product and bring it to the fans that want to see it no matter where in the world you are, no matter what you're doing. They are a truly incredible organization, and I commend them for continually being one step ahead of the curve and truly seperating themselves in the market.
- Streak For The Cash
The idea behind the game is simple. All one has to do is select the winner of a particular outcome that ESPN provides you with. All different types of sporting events are included in the Streak For The Cash. Often times, the game will ask the participant to predict the outcome in terms of a simple win-lose scenario, but other times, it asks, for example, who will score more points, when will this scenario occur in the game, etc.
The idea behind the game is to predict as many outcomes in a row correctly, as if to create a streak of wins.
There is a massive incentive for getting to 27 consecutive correct predictions and that is the grand prize of $1,000,000. In simple math terms, the probability of correctly predicting 27 outcomes with two possible choices each time is 1 in 134,217,728. That is an absurd probability. Frequently, you will see participants with a streak of 18 or 19 on the Leaderboard which is displayed on the front page of the site, but this is still a long way off from 27.
Anyway, the Streak For The Cash website also provides some interesting participating metrics along with each possible pick. They show the percentage of participants who have selected each outcome and they also indicate to what degree that outcome is being selected by categorizing the scenario into one of four different categories: cold, warm, warmer, hot.
I wanted to find if there was any sort of relationship between the percentage breakdown in each scenario and the probability of success. One would assume that those scenarios that have close to 100% picking one particular side in a scenario would be more accurate. The results I found are most definitely surprising.
- Methods
- Results
Distributions - Percentages
In 73 cases (or 27.8%) of the game the percentages have been 90%-100% and 0%-10.
- In 52% of the cases, the majority, i.e., the 90%-100% have been accurate, while 48% of the time the minority, or between 0%-10% of the players have been correct
- In 52% of the cases, the majority, i.e., the 80%-89.9% have been accurate, while 48% of the time the minority, or between 10%-19.9% of the players have been correct
- In 48% of the cases, the majority, i.e., the 70%-79.9% have been accurate, while 52% of the time the minority, or between 20%-29.9% of the players have been correct
- In 60% of the cases, the majority, i.e., the 60%-69.9% have been accurate, while 40% of the time the minority, or between 30%-39.9% of the players have been correct
- In 37.5% of the cases, the majority, i.e., the 50%-59.9% have been accurate, while 62.5% of the time the minority, or between 40%-49.9% of the players have been correct

There were 80 cases of “Cold"
- The majority, i.e., percentage equaling 50% or greater was correct 46.25%
- The majority, i.e., percentage equaling 50% or greater was correct 55.4%
- The majority, i.e., percentage equaling 50% or greater was correct 52.5%
- The majority, i.e., percentage equaling 50% or greater was correct 49.2%
There have been 11 opportunities with Tennis
- The majority has been accurate 45.5% of the time
- The majority has been accurate 72.7% of the time
- The majority has been accurate 0% of the time
- The majority has been accurate 54.1% of the time
- The majority has been accurate 44.0% of the time
- The majority has been accurate 70% of the time
- The majority has been accurate 0% of the time
- The majority has been accurate 38.5% of the time
- The majority has been accurate 60.4% of the time
- The majority has been accurate 36.4% of the time
- The majority has been accurate 100% of the time
- Conclusion
3 comments:
this is extremely interesting. its exactly what i was looking for. I am curious as to how this worked out for anyone who has tried it?
Did you collect the data yourself, recording everything each day? I was thinking about performing a similar analysis but I'm having trouble collecting enough data to ensure that my results are significant. It seems like golf is the way to go, but you only have 11 entries for golf. 11 is too small. I would be interested to find out if the percentage remains as high if there were more entries.
Nice research. I would love to see someone perform this research over a year or two trial. Wonder what the outcome would be. Check my site if you get a chance, I make Streak for the Cash predictions - www.StreakWizard.com
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